Perkins writes,
"I would call attention to the parallels of fascist Nazi Germany, to its
war on its one percent, namely its Jews, to the progressive war on the American
one percent, namely the rich."

The venture capital firm he co-founded quickly distanced
itself. On Twitter Saturday, the company said, “Tom Perkins has not been
involved in KPCB in years. We were shocked by his views expressed today in the WSJ and do not agree."

CBS News contributor and analyst Mellody Hobson told the “CBS
This Morning” co-hosts that this is not the first time something like this has
happened and it is “completely inappropriate.”

“There has been some rhetoric before. Steve Schwarzman has equated some issues around taxation with the Holocaust,” said Hobson. “I
would encourage Mr. Perkins to study his history because the Holocaust had
nothing to do with economics. It was about ethnic cleansing. He should look to
things like the French and Russian revolutions, where the masses tried to
overthrow the rich.”

Hobson said part of the reason this issue is coming up in this
way is that corporate leaders in the United States are, in some ways, treated like
celebrities and they are paid much more than the average worker.

“There’s a lot of attention on them. The Internet age has
put them front and center and the big issue has been their compensation” she
said.

She said that in today’s society the typical chief
executive officer makes 354 times more than the typical worker in his or her
company. However, she said that if you look back to 1980, the difference was
only 42 times.

“It’s been that kind of income inequality that that has
started a lot of backlash and chatter, and I think put CEOs in the hot seat,”
she said. “But, they make the big bucks for a reason and I think they have to
have a thicker skin around these issues.”

Also, Hobson discussed the possibility that income
inequality will be discussed in the President’s State of the Union Address on
Tuesday. Obama calls it “one of the
defining challenges of our time” and Hobson said she would call Obama’s message
“positive populism.”

“The business community, I think more-or-less, will be
neutral in how they receive it,” she said. “What they hate is uncertainty. When
they don’t know what will happen to them, that’s when they get nervous.”

To watch the full interview with Mellody Hobson, watch the video in the player above